[ISN] Teen Anarchist's Supporters Accuse FBI Of AIM Hack

From: InfoSec News (isnat_private)
Date: Thu Feb 07 2002 - 22:52:44 PST

  • Next message: InfoSec News: "[ISN] How to hack unbreakable Oracle servers"

    http://www.newsbytes.com/news/02/174307.html
    
    By Brian McWilliams, Newsbytes
    LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA, U.S.A.,
    07 Feb 2002, 9:04 AM CST
     
    The FBI declined to comment Wednesday on allegations that federal
    agents have commandeered online chat accounts belonging to the
    teen-aged operator of anti-government site Raisethefist.com.
    
    However, the agency denies allegations that it has harassed associates
    of 18-year-old self-proclaimed anarchist Sherman Martin Austin.
    
    According to several of Austin's supporters, someone has repeatedly
    logged into the teen's accounts on America Online's AOL Instant
    Messenger (AIM) real-time chat service while he was in police custody.
    
    Austin, a resident of Sherman Oaks, Calif., has been incarcerated in a
    high-security federal jail in Manhattan since Saturday on charges of
    disorderly conduct following a protest against the World Economic
    Forum in New York.
    
    A friend listed on Austin's AIM Buddy List who identified himself only
    as "James" said he was threatened Monday by someone he suspects was an
    FBI agent using Austin's account. "He told me, 'Your ass is next,
    pal,'" James said.
    
    Laura Bosley, a spokesperson for the FBI's Los Angeles field office,
    declined to say whether the FBI would commandeer someone's AIM account
    as part of an investigation, citing its ongoing nature. But she said
    FBI agents would never harass associates of a suspect.
    
    Last week, federal agents executed a search warrant at Austin's home
    and confiscated several computers as well as equipment for making
    explosives. According to an affidavit, the FBI suspects Austin of
    hacking into several Web sites to post anarchist messages and using
    his own site, Raisethefist.com, to publish bomb-making information.
    
    Newsbytes independently observed that someone using Austin's AOL
    screen name "Ucaun" signed on to the service briefly Tuesday night.  
    But that person did not respond to interview requests.
    
    Matt Yarborough, head of the cyberlaw section at Fish and Richardson
    and a former assistant U.S. attorney, said it was "certainly possible"  
    that FBI agents commandeered Austin's AIM accounts as part of their
    undercover work on the case.
    
    "I've dealt with federal agents who did things that made my stomach
    turn. But, assuming these claims are true, the agents might see this
    as a good technique for flushing people out," said Yarborough, who
    noted that Austin may also have been instructed to sign on to his AIM
    account while in custody.
    
    However, Mark Rasch, vice president of cyberlaw at Predictive Systems
    and a former federal prosecutor, said it was most likely that one of
    Austin's enemies, and not the FBI, was responsible for hijacking his
    AIM accounts.
    
    "It would be very improbable that even an overzealous agent would do
    this. It's unfathomable that a court would grant such an order," said
    Rasch.
    
    Susan Tipograph, the attorney representing Austin in New York, said
    Austin has not spoken to the FBI since being arrested. According to
    Tipograph, he has been held in a maximum-security cell around the
    clock and it was impossible that he would have signed on to his
    account.
    
    "He's in the same unit where they held people who bombed the U.S.  
    embassies in Africa in 1998. It seems odd to treat an 18-year-old this
    way," said Tipograph.
    
    Austin's political views have made him a target for verbal attack by
    right-wing extremists, his associates said, but they dismissed
    suggestions that his accounts may have been compromised by such
    adversaries.
    
    While AIM accounts are password-protected, the technology has been
    abused in the past by attackers who hijack others' AIM accounts
    through trickery, Trojan horses, packet-sniffing and other techniques.
    
    Matthew Dickinson, a San Diego-based accountant who said he was an
    online acquaintance of Austin's, reported that the teen told him last
    autumn that his AIM accounts had been hacked into by law enforcement
    officials.
    
    Dickinson provided a Nov. 10 e-mail message, purportedly from Austin,
    in which he recounted discovering that one of his AIM screen names was
    being used by the FBI to harass him.
    
    The message included a log file of an AIM session in which someone
    using Austin's screen name Raisethefist told Austin, "This is a matter
    of national security, pal. We're tapping all accounts," and, "We're
    watching you, and packeting you. Warrants are wonderful."
    
    AIM log files are simple text documents that can be created or edited
    using a word processor. As such, their authenticity is difficult to
    determine.
    
    It was not clear whether Austin shared the login information for his
    AIM account with family members or friends. Austin's mother referred
    all inquiries to Tipograph, who said she had no information on the
    matter.
    
    If federal agents took over Austin's AIM accounts without his
    permission, such an action would constitute unauthorized access and be
    illegal, according to Yarborough.
    
    "The government doesn't have the right to hack into someone else's
    computer. If these allegations are true, it would look bad in court,
    as if the agents were attempting to intimidate people to disclose
    information," he said.
    
    In an interview with Newsbytes last week over AIM, Austin admitted to
    defacing several Web sites in the past three years to post messages
    about overthrowing the U.S. government.
    
    One of the defacements included the message: "We don't gather weapons,
    plan extreme operations, and risk our lives for nothing. This is
    real."
    
    Austin was not charged with any crimes as a result of his arrest in
    New York, Tipograph said. However, federal charges were filed against
    him for posting information at his site about making explosives and
    with possessing a Molotov cocktail, which is considered an
    "unregistered firearm" by the FBI.
    
    No hacking charges have yet been filed against Austin, although Bosley
    told Newsbytes that additional charges are possible.
    
    Raisethefist.com has been unreachable since late last week. Austin's
    former hosting company, About Web Services, refused to comment on the
    status of the site, citing the firm's privacy policy.
    
    Domain registration records today showed that Raisethefist.com is no
    longer receiving domain-name service from About Web's Freeservers.com
    service, and that the domain was transferred to InfoSpace's HyperMart
    hosting service on Feb. 1.
    
    In the interview last week, Austin told Newsbytes that he didn't think
    18 was too young to be an anarchist.
    
    "Sixteen-year-olds fight in the New Peoples Army in the Philippines,"  
    he said.
    
    When asked whether he thought it should be illegal to publish
    bomb-making information, Austin replied that everyone should have a
    right to distribute such knowledge.
    
    "I think it should be illegal for other people to get rich off
    dropping bombs on poor women and children. I personally would like a
    society without bombs," he said.
    
    According to an FBI affidavit, a search by New York police of Austin's
    car last weekend uncovered "electrical wiring, electrical tape, one
    empty gasoline tank, and anarchist literature."
    
    
    
    -
    ISN is currently hosted by Attrition.org
    
    To unsubscribe email majordomoat_private with 'unsubscribe isn' in the BODY
    of the mail.
    



    This archive was generated by hypermail 2b30 : Fri Feb 08 2002 - 02:31:59 PST